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by mytailorisrich
194 days ago
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It is true [1][2].
I don't know how the graph you quote is calculated (no inflation?) but clearly the GDP hasn't grown 30% since 2020 (31,516 to 41,184), LOL. 6% growth a year would be a wet dream anywhere in the developped world. The GDP grew only 1.3% over the last 12 months and the population had grown 1.1% over the preceding 12 months... So at best economic growth barely exceeds population growth but overall it's flat to down. [1] https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/grossdomesticproductgdp/times... [2] https://tradingeconomics.com/united-kingdom/gdp-per-capita > However, trade with the EU was declining as a proportion of total trade even before Brexit Yes, it has slightly declined, probably because of Brexit. The point is that it is one thing to say that we are "free" to do as we please, but the reality is not so simple if that means taking a massive hit on 41% of our exports! This is the whole Brexit story. |
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Is it actually 41%? Is it a massive hit? What is the economic impact of small trade frictions on a declining proportion of exports. The main reason for the decline is not Brexit, it is that the EU is a declining proportion of the world economy because Europe is the slowest growing region of the world.
> This is the whole Brexit story.
No, it really is not. Similar economies in the EU are doing about as badly as the UK so you cannot blame Brexit
> So at best economic growth barely exceeds population growth but overall it's flat to down.
One of the replies to my comment links to a graph at constant currency and is shows low growth so you might stretch to flat/stagnant, but definitely not down.